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23 March 2026
Long before astronauts set foot on the lunar surface, scientists in Arizona were already studying it in remarkable detail. By the time President John F. Kennedy announced in 1961 that the United States would land a man on the moon before the end of the decade, researchers at the University of Arizona had already begun mapping the moon’s surface.
Their work would prove critical to the success of NASA’s robotic missions and the historic Apollo landings. At the center of this effort was Gerard P. Kuiper, widely known as the father of modern planetary science.
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Kuiper’s Arizona journey began in 1960 when he moved to Tucson and founded the Lunar and Planetary Laboratory at the University of Arizona. The laboratory quickly became a global center for planetary research, attracting scientists eager to explore the mysteries of the moon and other worlds.
Among them was astronomer Ewen Whitaker, who worked closely with Kuiper on some of the most detailed lunar maps ever created.
Together, the team set out to answer a question that had never been solved before: how could scientists accurately map the surface of the moon from Earth?
In 1963, the University of Arizona Press published a groundbreaking scientific resource called the Rectified Lunar Atlas. This atlas contained the first images that showed the moon’s surface without the distortions typically seen through telescopes.
Normally, when astronomers observe the moon from Earth, the curvature and viewing angle of the lunar surface create warped images. Kuiper’s team developed a creative solution.
They stitched together lunar photographs taken by Southern Arizona telescopes and projected them onto a globe representing the moon. By photographing that model globe from above, the scientists produced images that simulated the perspective an astronaut might see while flying over the moon.
For the first time, researchers could study the lunar surface in a way that resembled a true aerial view.
Kuiper and his colleagues continued refining their work, culminating in the Consolidated Lunar Atlas, published in 1967 by the Lunar and Planetary Laboratory for use by the U.S. Air Force.
The atlas featured the highest-resolution images of the moon ever captured from Earth at that time. Many of those images were taken using a NASA-funded 61-inch telescope atop Mount Bigelow in the Catalina Mountains north of Tucson.
Today, that telescope is operated by Steward Observatory and bears Kuiper’s name.
To capture the detailed photographs needed for the atlas, Kuiper’s team focused the telescope on the moon’s terminator, the boundary between sunlight and darkness.
Because sunlight strikes the lunar terrain at a low angle along this boundary, shadows highlight small ridges, craters, and valleys. By photographing thousands of images along this line, scientists were able to reveal subtle details in the moon’s landscape.
Kuiper’s expertise soon became essential to the U.S. space program. He served as principal investigator for NASA’s robotic Ranger missions, which photographed and mapped the moon before human missions attempted to land.
The data gathered by these missions helped prepare the way for the unmanned Surveyor missions, which successfully landed robotic probes on the lunar surface.
These early landings reassured NASA that the moon’s surface could support spacecraft and astronauts. The work ultimately helped guide landing site selection and precision landing techniques used during Apollo 12 in 1969, the second crewed mission to land on the moon.
The University of Arizona’s contributions to space exploration did not stop with the Apollo era.
Since Apollo, the university has helped image the surface of Mars in extraordinary detail using the High Resolution Imaging Science Experiment aboard the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter.
The university also led the team that imaged the surface of Saturn’s moon Titan beneath its cloud cover through the Cassini-Huygens mission.
More recently, the University of Arizona led the OSIRIS-REx mission, which successfully collected material from an asteroid and returned it to Earth for study.
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What began as a small group of determined researchers in Tucson helped shape one of humanity’s greatest achievements. Through ingenuity, persistence, and a willingness to attempt what others thought impossible, Kuiper and his colleagues transformed how scientists study worlds beyond Earth.
Their work not only mapped the moon but also helped humanity reach it.
And in true University of Arizona fashion, it particularly embodied the school’s enduring spirit: Bear Down.
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